dragon plaque Teaching history with 100 objects€¦ · teachers of history throughout the country...
Transcript of dragon plaque Teaching history with 100 objects€¦ · teachers of history throughout the country...
Engraved bone
King Alfred’s
jewel
Egyptian mummy
Eye of Horus
Greek theatre mask
Erasmus Darwin’s notebook
Corporation mace
Thomas Clarkson’s chest
Aircraft factory
works pass
Anti-apartheid
badge
Qing dynasty altar set
Wedgwood tea set
Restoration fan
Roman temple
London Jewish Bakers’ Union banner
Guy Fawkes’ lantern
Florence Nightingale’s case
Bronze Age mace head
Medieval game
counter The Mary Rose
Sutton Hoo helmet
Britain’s Bayeux tapestry
Photo of Amy Barbour-James
Great Fire bucket
Roman tombstone
Enigma machine
Anglo-Saxon figure
Roman gladiators vase
Portrait of Richard III
St Thomas Becket
The Happisburgh handaxe
Mesolithic headdress
Early Iron Age boat
Viking treasure
Neolithic quern
Roman game board
Maya maize god
Barrel of flour
Head of Hadrian
Peterloo handkerchief
First passenger locomotive
Carved stone ball
Viking dragon plaque
Victorian disaster Shrapnel-
damaged clock
Anglo-Saxon stained glass
Pictish wolf
Charles Edward Stuart’scanteen
National Museum of Scotland
Galleries of Justice
Ulster Museum
National Museum of Wales
The British Museum
LondonCardiff
Edinburgh
Belfast
Scotland
N.Ireland
Wales
England
Shetland
Some of the millions of fascinating objects to be found in the museums across the UK are shown on this map. Where will you visit? Add your own museums and objects.
Teaching history with 100 objects
teachinghistory100.org
Illustrations by Darel Seow
This map illustrates a selection of the one hundred objects from museums across the UK that are featured on the Teaching history with 100 objects website. Visit the website to find resources, information and teaching ideas to inspire students’ interest in history.
Teaching history with 100 objects
Fold-out map
teachinghistory100.org
teachinghistory100.org
What is Teaching history with 100 objects?
Teaching history with 100 objects is the result of a partnership between museums across the UK and the British Museum. It has been funded by the Department for Education to help equip teachers to teach the national history curriculum in England through the provision of high quality resources, up to date subject expertise and stimulating teaching ideas. However, its potential extends beyond England to teachers of history throughout the country and internationally. Teaching history with 100 objects harnesses the power of objects to motivate young people’s interest in history and provides resources to inspire students’ study of events and people in the past.
The online resource teachinghistory100.org
Teaching history with 100 objects consists of 100 online resources based on objects selected from museums in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales including the British Museum. These resources may be used individually to support and enhance teachers’ current practice or can be combined to provide object-based units of study for a historical period, culture or theme.
The British Museum across the UK
The British Museum reaches a breadth of audiences and museums across the UK through a programme of sharing collections and expertise. It does this by working hand in hand with partner organisations in meaningful collaboration to develop funded programmes that present the best of each institution. Objects from around 40 museums across the UK are included in Teaching history with 100 objects. Why not make a visit to see your local collections?
This bucket was found in 1974 during archaeological excavations near where the Great Fire of London began. It offers a way to explore how the fire was fought, how the approach used in 1666 differed from our modern-day fire service, and what this tells us about city life then and now. It is a familiar domestic object, but made of leather and personalised with initials, allowing consideration of possible owners and their experience of the fire.
Half a mile south of the religious site of Stonehenge, a Bronze Age leader was buried under a mound in the richest prehistoric grave found in Britain. The gold objects buried in his grave allow the exploration of power and status in this period and of the far-reaching network of contacts between Britain and Europe.
This object comes from the largest Anglo-Saxon cemetery excavated in England. The cemetery, in Norfolk, was begun around AD 425 and provides evidence for the Anglo-Saxons in Britain over almost 200 years from the earliest stages of settlement. The figure is unique in England, but provides a good starting point for exploring some of the changes that took place in the first century after the end of Roman rule.
This barrel was one of thousands sent in 1863 as a gift from northerners in the United States to feed starving, unemployed cotton mill workers in Lancashire. The American Civil War stopped the free flow of raw cotton to Britain causing a desperate Cotton Famine in the northern mill towns. The story offers insights into Britain’s greatest 19th-century trade, the lives of its industrial poor and tensions between moral and economic decisions.
This folding fan carries decoration that refers to the Restoration of the English monarchy under Charles II. It was clearly owned and used by someone in favour of Charles and offers an opportunity to explore the Restoration process itself and, more specifically, the responses to it of different sectors of society. It can also lead on to study of social life under Charles and a comparison with the period of the Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell.
This is the inner coffin of an ancient Egyptian woman of elite status who was 50–60 years old when she died. The mummy itself and the outer coffin have also survived. The decoration on the coffin illustrates some important elements of ancient Egyptian beliefs about the afterlife, while scientific examination of the mummy has shed light on aspects of health and aging in ancient Egypt.
This vase was made in Colchester from clay obtained locally. It shows different forms of gladiator combat. These scenes provide direct evidence for types of gladiator as well as acting as a starting point for study of other aspects of this form of public entertainment. Such a distinctively Roman object, made and found in a distant province, raises the issue of how Romanised the people of the empire became.
This carved whalebone plaque was found in the grave of a wealthy, older Viking woman, who was buried with a man and a child, along with other rich grave goods. The function of the plaque is a mystery, offering opportunities to learn about the interpretation of archaeology, as well as discussing the roles of women in Viking society and examining the materials the Vikings used.
By the early AD 1900s, there was a large and flourishing Jewish community in London’s East End. Workers had begun to unionise immediately after they arrived in Britain in order to campaign for improved working conditions. In 1924 the Labour Party formed a government for the first time. The banner is a good starting point for exploring immigration and responses to it and industry, politics and the labour movement in the inter-war years.
This Commonplace Book is a fascinating record of the ideas and inventions of Erasmus Darwin (1731–1802), a Lichfield physician who was also an inventor, scientist and poet. He was a founding member of the Lunar Society and one of the key thinkers of the Enlightenment. Darwin’s Commonplace Book contains 160 pages of his handwritten notes and sketches, and is a valuable source for helping students to understand the intellectual and scientific roots of Britain’s Industrial Revolution.
This alabaster panel shows the moment in AD 1170 when four knights murdered Archbishop Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral, following misconstrued instructions from King Henry II. The object offers a starting point for studying a range of aspects of the medieval period from the struggle between church and state to the nature and importance of religious devotion.
Prehistoric logboats carved out of a single tree trunk are sometimes found preserved in waterlogged conditions, but an excavation in Cambridgeshire found nine boats dating from the Bronze and Iron Ages, showing a remarkably long-lived and stable tradition of boat use in the fens. This object provides an opportunity to explore the navigation of waterways for transport, trade and fishing.
This helmet was found at a burial site in Suffolk along with many other valuable objects. The burial provides insights into the life of the Anglo-Saxon elite and into connections between Britain and other parts of the world. The finds at Sutton Hoo changed historians’ views about the Anglo-Saxon period, which had been regarded as a Dark Age following the end of Roman Britain.
Given out as a prize to a member of the audience at the end of a children’s entertainment show, this rocking horse is a poignant reminder of the disaster that occurred on 16 June 1883 in the Victoria Hall, Sunderland, when 183 children were tragically crushed to death. Shows of this kind were examples of philanthropic or charitable activities common in Victorian Britain. The horse offers an opportunity to explore 19th-century childhood, philanthropy and social reform.
This Buddhist altar-set was created in the court glass workshops of the Qianlong emperor, third ruler of the last of the Chinese imperial dynasties, the Qing (1644–1912). The glass technology draws on European glass-making expertise which arrived in the Qing court with the Jesuit missions of the AD 1600s and 1700s. The altar-set provides an opportunity to study the interplay of tradition and innovation in China and the impact of growing western interests.
This terracotta model of a theatre mask is an example of the sort of evidence we have to use to find out about ancient Greek drama. Theatre is one of the most famous and most important legacies of ancient Greece to western culture, but ancient theatre performances and the context in which they took place were very different from what we experience today. The mask leads naturally into the exploration of costume, plays and theatres.
This head was part of a larger than life-size bronze statue of the Roman emperor Hadrian. Statues like this were raised across the empire. This one may have been put up to commemorate Hadrian’s visit to Britain in AD 122, as Hadrian travelled the empire establishing its limits and securing its boundaries. This object gives insight into Hadrian’s leadership and the use of the imperial image as propaganda.
The valuable objects in this hoard were discovered in 2007. They probably belonged to a powerful Viking who accumulated them through raiding and trading connections across Europe and beyond. The hoard helps us understand more about the Vikings’ international connections and about their struggle with the Anglo-Saxons for control of England.
This is one of thousands of Enigma machines used during the Second World War by German forces to encrypt secret radio communications. A large team of workers, based at Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire, succeeded in developing techniques that allowed the German codes to be deciphered. The Enigma machine provides an exciting starting point for the role of code breaking in the conduct of the war, the contribution made by women to the war effort, and the development of the digital age.
The Peterloo handkerchief commemorates the Peterloo Massacre of 16 August 1819. On that day, more than 60,000 people from Manchester and the surrounding area gathered to demand the right to vote. Eighteen people were killed and several hundred were injured. In the months that followed, prints, poems and a range of everyday objects were produced in memory of the massacre. The Peterloo handkerchief is a powerful reminder of people’s long struggle for universal suffrage in Britain.
This mace, a ceremonial symbol of authority of the town’s most prominent citizens, was originally made in the late AD 1400s for Stratford-upon-Avon’s Guild of the Holy Cross. In the middle of the next century, the Guild was dissolved and the mace re-purposed for the new Corporation of the town. The object offers an insight into the impact of the Reformation and its link with William Shakespeare whose works contributed significantly to the formation of a new national identity.
The soldier shown on this tombstone came from the region of the present-day Netherlands and belonged to an auxiliary cavalry regiment stationed at Corinium in the west of England. The tombstone offers a good starting point from which to explore the Roman army, the cultural diversity of the Roman army in Britain and the value of tombstones and their inscriptions for finding out about Roman Britain.
This haloed figure from the twin monasteries at Wearmouth-Jarrow is made of the earliest surviving stained glass in northern Europe. The techniques of stained glass were introduced to England from France by Benedict Biscop, abbot of the monastery during the time of Bede, the famous early historian of England. The glass provides a chance to explore how the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Northumbria influenced the development of Christianity in Britain and contributed to Anglo-Saxon art and culture.
This photograph from around 1908 shows Amy Barbour-James as a little girl. Her father John, born in British Guiana (present-day Guyana) fought for the rights of the British black community and Amy continued this work. She died in 1988. The family’s history, in two British imperial territories as well as in London, offers insights into the changing experiences of black people within the British Empire and their struggle for recognition and equality in post-colonial Britain
This elaborate set of portable cutlery and wine beakers was among the possessions of Prince Charles Edward Stuart during the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745. Following Charles’s defeat at the Battle of Culloden in 1746, the canteen was seized by William, Duke of Cumberland, commander of the Hanoverian forces. The canteen can be used to develop enquiries into the events leading up to the Rebellion and the subsequent role of Scots in the growth of the British Empire.
This statue shows the Maya maize god as a youthful and handsome man with a stylised corn headdress. It provides a visual starting point for exploration of the importance of corn and of the harvest cycle as well as the religious beliefs of the Maya.
All cultures have developed games to be played during leisure periods. The Romans are best known for their large-scale entertainments, but they also had simpler ways of passing the time such as board games. Evidence for the same Roman games can be found across the empire. This board, which was found in North Wales, offers a good starting point for finding out about everyday pastimes in Roman Britain.
The original Bayeux tapestry is a 70-metre strip of embroidered linen made in the AD 1070s. It tells a version of the events of AD 1064–1066, including the death of Edward the Confessor and the Battle of Hastings. This faithful replica of the tapestry was made in the 19th century by 35 skilled women embroiderers so that Britain would have its own copy of the tapestry. It allows exploration of the events that led up to the Norman conquest of England in AD 1066.
Thelma Barlow worked at the Parnall Aircraft factory in Yate, which made aircraft parts. On 27 February 1941 the factory was bombed by the Luftwaffe. Many people died in the raid. Thelma Barlow survived, but this charred works pass was all that was left of her personal belongings. The pass can be used to initiate or develop study of the impact of the Second World War on life in Britain in terms of the experience of the war and changes in the role of women.
Built by Robert Stephenson and Company, Locomotion No.1 was the first steam locomotive to pull a purpose-built passenger carriage. It ran on the opening day of the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825. The Stockton and Darlington Railway was the first steam hauled, public passenger railway in the world. This achievement of 19th-century engineering provides a good starting point for examining the impact of passenger rail travel on Victorian Britain.
The recent discovery and scientific analysis of Richard III’s skeleton has inspired renewed interest in the period and specifically in the appearance and personality of the king himself. This portrait, the earliest surviving version of a prototype made during the king’s lifetime, is a unique and unparalleled representation of Richard. It offers a starting point for investigating the changing interpretations and narratives of history.
This large stone carving is from Aquae Sulis, the town that is now modern Bath. It decorated the front of the temple to the goddess Sulis Minerva, which stood near a sacred hot water spring. The carvings on the pediment show a combination of local British and Roman religious imagery, and enable discussion of Roman religion and the response of the Romans to native beliefs in the countries they conquered.
This Anglo-Saxon jewel was probably part of an aestel or pointer and was made during the reign of Alfred, who became king at a time of change in Britain. Alfred’s achievements in diplomacy and warfare with the Vikings and in education and culture make him the only English king or queen to be called ‘the Great’. The jewel provides opportunities to discuss Alfred as a leader as well as Anglo-Saxon language, texts, art and religion.
This alarm clock is a casualty of war: embedded in its face is a large fragment of a shell fired on Hartlepool by a German warship on 16 December 1914. For the first time since the civil wars of the 17th century, British civilians were killed by direct enemy fire. The clock provides a good starting point for looking at the nature of the First World War as a new sort of warfare and at the impact of the war on people in Britain.
This chest belonged to Thomas Clarkson, a leading British campaigner against the transatlantic slave trade, who helped form the first Abolitionist Committee in 1787. Clarkson filled the chest with evidence to support the campaign. He worked closely with others such as Equiano and Wedgwood and this chest serves as a good starting point for an enquiry into the methods that contributed to the abolition of slavery and the slave trade.
This medieval counter is from a board game called Tables. It depicts a Norman knight standing on the drawbridge of a stone-built structure. It provides a starting point for investigating several aspects of England in the AD 1100s, from the leisure activities of the nobility to the importance of castles to the struggles for the English throne.
The carved stones from the territory of the Picts in north-east Scotland are some of the most striking artistic achievements of the early medieval period. The rich mix of geometric shapes, animals, everyday objects and Christian imagery offers fascinating raw material for students to explore and interpret. The imagery on the stones provides an opportunity to identify some causes of historical change and to investigate the origins of the kingdom of Scotland.
Produced in their thousands in temple workshops, amulets such as this Eye of Horus were cheap and readily available and were routinely worn by the living as well as being placed with the bodies of the dead. The Eye of Horus was one of the most popular amulets, and a symbol of healing and medicine. Everyday religious items like this amulet shed light on beliefs and worship in ancient Egypt, and Egyptian gods more generally.
This badge was produced by the Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM), which was founded in 1959 and proved to be one of Britain’s most successful campaigning organisations. The AAM was begun by South Africans who had fled apartheid and settled in England. The badge offers a starting point from which students can explore increased awareness of and campaigning against racism in Britain as well as abroad in the second half of the 20th century.
Manufactured by the pottery firm Wedgwood, this tea set is made of unglazed red stoneware with silver mounts and may be associated with Queen Adelaide, wife of William IV. It serves as a good starting point for an enquiry into tea as an example of the interaction of mass production and mass consumption in the context of British imperialism in the 19th century.
The Mary Rose was built between 1509 and 1511 as the flagship of Henry VIII’s fleet. During manoeuvres, the Mary Rose heeled over and sank and this gun sank with her. The recovery of the wreck of the Mary Rose in 1982 is one of the great stories of British archaeology. The cannon makes a good starting point for investigating the foreign policy of Henry VIII and the development of the English navy, as well as how the finds from the Mary Rose enrich our knowledge of life in Tudor England.
The caves in the limestone gorge of Creswell Crags have provided archaeologists with important evidence of human activity towards the end of the last Ice Age, when the area was right at the edge of the ice sheet. This fragment of rib bone is the only known piece of small, portable Ice Age art showing an animal from Britain and tells us about the movement of people, the animals they hunted and how these people saw the world.
After the end of the last Ice Age, by 9000 BC, weather conditions had become similar to today and plants and animals had returned to the landscape of Britain. At Star Carr in Yorkshire, archaeologists found the remains of a settlement which had been preserved well in waterlogged soil. The people hunted red deer, among other animals, and made headdresses from their antlers. Star Carr was very important in helping archaeologists understand the Mesolithic.
This carved stone ball was found in a house at Skara Brae in Orkney, the best-preserved Neolithic settlement in Britain. Skilfully made, with 67 ground pyramid-shaped knobs, it must have been a prized possession of a prominent person in the community. It was a symbol of power but it could also have been used as a dangerous weapon. Other carved stone objects of various shapes have been found at Skara Brae.
Before farming arrived in Britain 6,000 years ago, people collected wild plants and hunted wild animals, birds and fish to eat. Saddle querns were invented as tools for grinding grain to make flour. This object is a good starting point for exploring these changes in the lifestyle of early people in Britain.
This writing case belonged to Florence Nightingale, who came to fame as ‘The Lady of the Lamp’ during the Crimean War of 1853–1856, in which Britain, allied with France and the Ottoman Empire, defeated Russia. As well as offering an entry point to studying Nightingale as a famous person, the case can prompt enquiries into how people wrote and learned to write in Victorian times and, more generally, how methods of communication have changed.
Guy Fawkes is said to have been carrying this lantern when he was arrested in the cellars of the Houses of Parliament on the night that the Gunpowder Plot was discovered in 1605. The object therefore has a very immediate connection to the people involved in the Plot. It is also a good starting point for investigating lighting methods before electricity.
This handaxe was a chance find in an area of eastern England where research has led to the date of the earliest human occupation of Britain being pushed back by 300,000 years. Investigations further along the coast uncovered 850,000-year-old footprints, the oldest human footprints outside Africa. At around 500,000 years old the later handaxe shows how early humans made versatile tools from the materials available in their environment.
Bucket from the Great Fire of London
AD 1660–1666 Museum of London
A mace head from near Stonehenge
1900–1700 BCWiltshire Museums
Figure of an Anglo-Saxon man
AD 500–600Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery
Barrel for Lancashire workers
AD 1863 Touchstones Rochdale
Restoration fan
About AD 1660The Fan Museum
The mummy and coffins of an Egyptian woman
750–525 BCManchester Museum
Roman gladiators vase
About AD 175Colchester Castle
Viking dragon plaque
AD 875–950Orkney Museum
London Jewish Bakers’ Union banner
About AD 1925Jewish Museum
Erasmus Darwin’s notebook
AD 1776–1787Erasmus Darwin House
The martyrdom of St Thomas Becket
About AD 1450–1500The British Museum
Early Iron Age boat
775–515 BCFlag Fen, Vivacity Peterborough Museums & Heritage
The Sutton Hoo helmet
AD 600–650The British Museum
Victorian disaster
AD 1883 Sunderland Museum
Qing dynasty altar set
AD 1736–1795Bristol Museum and Art Gallery
Greek theatre mask
About 200–50 BCThe British Museum
Head of the emperor Hadrian
AD 101–200The British Museum
Viking treasure
Buried around AD 927 Yorkshire Museum and the British Museum
Enigma cipher machine
About AD 1942–1943Bletchley Park Museum
Peterloo handkerchief
AD 1819 People’s History Museum
Corporation mace
Made in AD 1475 Shakespeare’s Birthplace Trust
Roman tombstone
About AD 60Corinium Museum
Anglo-Saxon stained glass
AD 600–1200Bede’s World
Photograph of Amy Barbour-James
About AD 1908 Black Cultural Archives
Charles Edward Stuart’s travelling canteen
AD 1740–1741National Museum of Scotland
Maya maize god
AD 600–800The British Museum
Roman game board
AD 100s Llandudno Museum
Britain’s Bayeux tapestry
AD 1885–1886Reading Museum
Aircraft factory works pass
AD 1941 Yate & District Heritage Centre
First passenger locomotive
AD 1825 Darlington Railway Centre & Museum
Portrait of Richard III
About AD 1515–1540Society of Antiquaries of London
Roman temple
1st century ADRoman Baths Museum, Bath
King Alfred’s jewel
AD 871–899Ashmolean Museum
Clock damaged by a German shell
Destroyed in AD 1914Museum of Hartlepool
Thomas Clarkson’s campaign chest
About AD 1785Wisbech and Fenland Museum
Medieval game counter AD 1150–1190Carisbrooke Castle Museum
Pictish wolf
AD 500–600Inverness Museum and Art Gallery
Eye of Horus amulet
685–525 BCNew Walk Museum and Art Gallery, Leicester
Anti-apartheid badge
AD 1984The British Museum
Wedgwood tea set
AD 1840–1845The British Museum
Cannon from the Mary Rose
Sank in AD 1545 Mary Rose Museum
Bone engraved with a horse
10,500 BCThe British Museum, on display at Creswell Crags
Mesolithic headdress
9000 BCScarborough Collections
Carved stone ball
3200–2500 BCNational Museum of Scotland
Neolithic quern
4000–2500 BC The British Museum
Florence Nightingale’s writing case
AD 1856 Florence Nightingale Museum
Guy Fawkes’ lantern
AD 1605 Ashmolean Museum
Earliest handaxe in Britain
About 500,000 years old Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery